Title: WHY DID THE POOREST COUNTRIES FAIL TO CATCH UP
1What really happened, 1980-early 2000s
Lectures 1 and 2
2Can you teach development? The answer is No!
- You can teach how to build a dam, or construct
the road, or possibly to improve school
curriculum - Or how to negotiate a project, or how to keep
accounts - But not development development consists of
myriads of actions conducted by individuals who
are motivated by own objectives - If devt projects are not built within the
existing incentive structure, they are like
cathedrals in the desert (useless) - Thus, IFIs can provide money if finance is the
constraint do actual projects (although they
may turn useless) or provide technical (macro
and micro) advice (although it usefulness is
often doubtful because IFIs have other objectives
than the wellbeing of a country in question)
3Discontinuity in development trends around
1978-80
- The watershed years (Bairoch)
- Tripling of oil prices
- Increase in real interest rates (from 1 to 5
in the USA and the world) - Debt crisis
- Chinas responsibility system introduced
- Latin American begins its lost decade, E.
Europe/USSR stagnate
4The outcome
- Middle income countries declined (Latin America,
EEurope/former USSR) - China and India pulled ahead
- Africas position deteriorated further
- Developed world pulled ahead
- World growth rate decreased by about 1
(compared to the 1960-78 period)
5Different ways to look at world growth rates
6Annual per capita growth rates 1980-2002
7Assessment
- World income growth slowed down by 1 percentage
point per capita p.a. - Poor and populous countries grew much faster and
average (population-weighted) growth rate even
increased - Countries growth record became much more
diverseand systematically so
8Theory and empirics going apart?
- In theory emphasis on conditional or
unconditional convergence (based on OECD
convergence) - In empirics 25 years of unconditional divergence
- This focus on conditional convergence has tended
to obscure the fact that, across the globe,
income levels have actually been diverging rather
than converging over the past forty years
(Dowrick and Delong, 2001, p. 25)
9Real income stagnation of countries, 1960-2001
(based on Reddy and Minoiu)
- Incomet three-year moving average centered at t
- Stagnation if income is lower than in the
previous 2 years and higher than in the next 4
years - Turning point income 1 higher than in the
previous year and 1 lower than in the subsequent
year - Spell of stagnation from the onset to the
turning point - Depth of stagnation (Income at outset Income
at the minimum) / Income in 2001
10- Depth of stagnation shows income loss, that is by
how much would the end period income be higher if
instead of stagnation (decline), country had a
zero real growth (during the stagnation period) - It is therefore a conservative estimate of income
(welfare) loss
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15The overall loss of income is measured in of
2000 output (under the Ho that instead of
stagnation there were zero growth).
16Stagnation during the four decades
17Some conclusions
- Big contrast between Africa and L. America (on
the one hand) and the rich world (old OECD) - The 1980s were the worst decade one-half of
countries were stagnators, the average length of
stagnation almost 7 years, (unweighted) income
loss 20 - Average income loss in the 1960s was only 14,
and only 12 of countries were stagnators
18Factors associated with stagnation (probit on
stagnators)
Not significant initial (1960) GDP per capita,
literacy rate, growth of domestic credit, growth
of exports Model 1, Table 4
19Growth over 1980-2002 period as function of
initial (1980) income
20Least developed countries (LLDC) did not grow
between 1980 and 2000
21Distribution of population (in year 2000)
according to how country did over 1980-2000
22LLDCs over the period 1980-2002
- Big time winners
- Lesotho
- Uganda (20001970)
- Bangladesh
- Big time losers
- Djibouti
- Madagascar
- Niger
- Sierra Leone
- Togo
- Zambia
- Haiti
23Top 15 relative winners with respect to the USA,
1980-2006
24Top 15 relative losers with respect to the USA,
1980-2006
25Main gainers and losers (excluding oil-producers)
26The relative decline of Latin America and the
Caribbean (1980-2006) (globalnew.dta)
twoway scatter gama gdpppp if year1980
region3, xscale(log) yline(0) ytitle(percent
gain with respect to usa) xtitle(GDP per capita
in 1980 in 2005 PPPs) xlabel(1000 2000 10000
20000) mlabel(contcod)
27And of Africa
28But the relative gain of Asia..
29Why is divergence of incomes puzzling in an era
of globalization?
30Definitions of globalization
- Official World Bank Freedom and ability of
individuals and firms to initiate voluntary
economic transactions with residents of other
countries. - Stiglitz Globalization is a closer integration
of the countries and peoples of the worldbrought
about byreduction in costs of transportation,
and the breakdown of artificial barriers to the
flow of goods, services, capital, knowledge, and
people across borders (Globalization and its
discontents)
31A puzzle of bad performance of LLDC
- Globalization should benefit more LLDC than the
rich countries (the convergence hypothesis) - Adoption of successful policies from the rich
world should benefit LLDCs (and even more than
the rich) - But the very opposite happened gt divergence of
per capita incomes
32Reform and growth in LAC
From World Bank, Lessons of the 1990s based on
Eduardo Lora
33Transition countries continued output divergence
despite policy convergence
twoway (line EBRD_sd year) (line gdpppp_sd year,
yaxis(2)), legend(off) text(6.2 1997 "standard
deviation of all gt EBRD indicators") text(3.5
2000 "standard deviation of GDI per capita")
34LAC countries continued output divergence
despite policy convergence
35Convergence and divergence
- Unconditional or s convergence (original studies
by Baumol for OECD countries based on Maddison
data). All countries end up with the same
steady-state equilibrium level (NCGT). - Slower growth of richer countries as MPK falls
and they get closer to technological frontier
(technology is freely available to all) - Conditional or ß convergence (Barro with human
capital only on the RHS instead of K and L).
Growth regressions based also on endogeneous
(new) growth theory each country ends with its
own steady-state equilibrium
36Relationship between d and ß convergence
- Sigma (or any other inequality measure)
convergence direct judgment about dispersal of
income levels - Beta convergence indirect (regression-based)
regularity thus not very useful except that it
allows us to retrieve a structural parameter in a
growth model - ß does not imply d convergence but d convergence
implies ß convergence (Wodon and Yitzhaki 2006
Economic Letters).
37- Endogeneous growth in response to increasing
returns to scale (no ? MPs), monopolistic
competition (no free competition), and no free
diffusion of technology (see Romer below). - All key neoclassical assumptions abandoned, role
of policies and institutions important - Noted Lucas paradox capital flows from rich to
rich countries mean country incomes diverge - But ß convergence compatible with greater
dispersal of growth rates and incomes - Often meaningless if Ethiopia had education
level and institutions of the US, it would grow
faster than the US! (These factors are
concomitant with high income, not independent of
it.)
38Endogenous growth Romers key points on
technology
- Technological change propels growth
- Technological change endogenous (responds to
incentives) - Technological change (knowledge) is a non-rival
but partially excludable good (non-rival can be
used by many excludable you can exclude some
people from using it) - Excludability (intellectual property rights) is
crucial to cover fixed costs of research and
leads to increasing economies of scale (and hence
to divergence in incomes) - (Romer The origins of endogenous growth, JEP,
1994)
39Only similar countries gain through trade
- Trade in goods is welfare improving only fort
countries at the similar level of development
(reducing redundancy in research effort) - If countries have very different factor
endowments, an increased supply of cheap labor
(after trade opens up) reduces incentive for the
K-rich country to innovate its better for the
US to trade with Europe than with Mexico - (Romer The new growth theory, p. 101)
40The bottom line
- s convergence among rich countries since WW2 and
possibly earlier at least in terms of wage-rates
(Williamson), and even during the Inter-war years
(Milanovic, Restat) - s divergence for the world recently, but also
historically, since the Industrial revolution - The world of increasing returns to scale PF is a
world of high income and very high inequality
(examples of Sylicon valley, soccer)
41Can we explain the bad performance of the poorest
countries?
42The openness premium turned from being pro-poor
to pro-rich
- Sachs and Warner (1985) find an openness premium
of 2.5 pa (higher growth of open countries) for
the period 1970-90 - A country closed if (i) tariff rategt40, (ii)
non-tariff barriers cover 40 of all imports,
(iii) socialist, (iv) state monopoly of major
exports, (v) black market premium gt20.
43Dowrick-deLong results for the two periods
From Dowrick and deLong, Convergence and
Globalization, Table 3
44Why did it change?
- The openness premium declined from 2 extra
growth to only 1.3 - May be due to other factors omitted in regression
- Are openness and highly skilled human capital
complements? (We shall see a similar story with
respect to globalization and inequality)
45- Openness premium still positive, in the post-1980
world but, - It now favors the rich (openness x initial GDP
per capita) has a positive sign, rather than
negative as in 1960-80 period - (The results persists when more controls
schooling, population growth, investment arte
introduced)
46Looking for proximate causes the likelihood of
war is 3 times higher in LLDC
47Intensity of reforms gap in 1990-95
48Policy appropriateness as judged by the World Bank
49Net appropriateness index difference between
LLDC and middle income countries much less
50Democracy index (PolityIV) major improvement in
the 1990 and then deterioration
51Average tariff rate continued decline
52How much do LLDC trade (in terms of their GDI)?
53How much investment do they get (in terms of
their GDI)?
54First cutLLDC vs. middle income countries
- Much greater likelihood of war
- Very slow reforms in the 1990s but pick up later
- Policies not significantly less appropriate
- Decreasing average level of protection
- Increasing trade/GDI but still 20 below middle
income countries - DFI/GDI about the same and increasing
- Lower democracy and deterioration since around
1995
55The effect on ROG pc pa (country fixed effects
in percent)
56So why did a typical LLDC fail to catch up?